| Literature DB >> 32047232 |
Lauren McConnell1, Oisín Houghton2, Peter Stewart1, Jana Gazdova1, Shambhavi Srivastava1, Chang Kim1, Mark Catherwood2, Anna Strobl3,4, Adrienne M Flanagan3,4, Anca Oniscu5, Leonie I Kroeze6, Patricia Groenen6, Philippe Taniere7, Manuel Salto-Tellez1,2, David Gonzalez8,9.
Abstract
Sarcoma is a rare disease affecting both bone and connective tissue and with over 100 pathologic entities, differential diagnosis can be difficult. Complementing immune-histological diagnosis with current ancillary diagnostic techniques, including FISH and RT-PCR, can lead to inconclusive results in a significant number of cases. We describe here the design and validation of a novel sequencing tool to improve sarcoma diagnosis. A NGS DNA capture panel containing probes for 87 fusion genes and 7 genes with frequent copy number changes was designed and optimized. A cohort of 113 DNA samples extracted from soft-tissue and bone sarcoma FFPE material with clinical FISH and/or RT-PCR results positive for either a translocation or gene amplification was used for validation of the NGS method. Sarcoma-specific translocations or gene amplifications were confirmed in 110 out of 113 cases using FISH and/or RT-PCR as gold-standard. MDM2/CDK4 amplification and a total of 25 distinct fusion genes were identified in this cohort of patients using the NGS approach. Overall, the sensitivity of the NGS panel is 97% with a specificity of 100 and 0% failure rate. Targeted NGS appears to be a feasible and cost-effective approach to improve sarcoma subtype diagnosis with the ability to screen for a wide range of genetic aberrations in one test.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32047232 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-020-0488-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842